In and around Manhattan, IL, families often visit during predictable windows—after work, before weekend plans, or around school schedules. That timing can make early warning signs easier to miss, especially when a resident is:
- moved less often due to mobility limits or post-surgery recovery,
- sleeping most of the day,
- dependent on staff for repositioning and hygiene,
- unable to clearly report discomfort.
Pressure ulcers can start as mild redness and progress quickly if the facility doesn’t document risk assessments and act promptly. By the time a family notices a wound, the record may already show how long the resident was at risk.
The practical takeaway: the timeline matters—and your attorney will focus on when the facility recognized risk, what it recorded, and how quickly it responded.


